Once upon a time, I earned a Master's Degree in Literature and was a Professor of Literature and Composition. I had a wonderful time writing my Master's Thesis about Children's and Young Adult Literature, and I considered earning a Ph.D. so that I could continue to pursue the written word, including British, American, Latin American and other Global Literatures, Children's and Young Adult Literature, all types of genres and occasionally even poetry. But life takes you in unexpected directions, and so now I am working for a non-profit agency (you can read about that on my other blog, A Little Bit of Wonder). Although my job keeps me too busy to post as many book reviews as I would like, Recommended Reading is a place where I can continue to share my literary discoveries and knowledge as time allows.

Please note that I post reviews for books that I recommend reading, just like the blog title says. This means that I typically won't post a review for a book that I completely dislike. This isn't because I shy away from making negative comments, but rather because I don't want to waste your time or mine (I won't even bother to finish a book if it's not any good). For more on this, see the explanation of my Rating System.)

Monday, February 7, 2011

Book Review: Ship Breaker

Paolo Bacigalupi, the author of the 2011 Michael L. Printz Award Winner Ship Breaker, drew his ideas for the novel from recent concerns with global warming, environmental issues in the Gulf Coast region, and knowledge of ship-breaking in Bangladesh.By transposing the world of the ship breakers to the more familiar setting of the United States, he hopes to help his readers examine the possibilities of the world we will all face if we use up the earth’s resources.

Watch Bacigalupi talk about his desire to write about a post-oil world, where people must deal with the consequences of global warming:

While there is a particular ominous message behind Ship Breaker, the novel never feels didactic or heavy-handed because Bacigalupi spins a fast-paced adventure.Ship Breaker focuses on Nailer, a scavenger who helps to pull apart the old-world oil tankers that are run-aground on the Gulf Coast.He crawls and slithers into the ducts of the abandoned ships, pulling out copper wiring and other bits of valuable metal.Soon he will be too big and too heavy to crawl through the duct systems, though, and without regular work on the light crew, he’ll be forced to fend for himself out on the dangerous beaches.Though his loyal friend Pima and her mother Sadna are fiercely protective of him, they won’t be able to help him get a spot on heavy crew – he isn’t strong enough to pull apart the outer hulls and massive pipes of the shipwrecked tankers.Nailer hasn’t given much thought to his future, though, because surviving the dangers of his current job and his violent, drug-addicted father take up most of his time.

After a particularly close brush with death, though, Nailer is lucky enough to come across an opportunity to escape the beaches of the Gulf Coast.When he and Pima discover a wealthy young girl trapped in a shipwreck, she seems to be their ticket to a new life.The daughter of an important shipping magnate, Nita tells them that she is being hunted by her father’s enemies, who want to use her as leverage to gain control of her family’s global corporation.If they will help her make contact with employees who remain loyal to her father, though, there will be a reward.

While Pima chooses to stay behind with her mother, Nailer decides to help Nita escape – burning all bridges with his violent father and hoping that he will be able to find a new life in the North.And so, while the first part of Ship Breaker explores the violent, seedy world of the scavengers and the Gulf Coast beaches, the second part of the novel follows Nailer and Nita as they set out on their journey through Orleans I and Orleans II to find someone who will take Nita back home to her family – and hopefully provide a place and a new life for Nailer as well.

Most of the novel is fast-paced and very involving, so I think that I would have enjoyed the story no matter the setting – but the way that Bacigalupi slowly unfolds his vision of a post-oil world is fascinating.The dystopian setting lends itself to the events of the novel in such a way that Nailer, Pima and Nita’s adventures feel fresh and unusual to me, although I must admit that I am not very well-read when it comes to science fiction (yet).I’ve read and enjoyed other dystopian novels, but this is the first that feels quite so tangibly connected to the world in which we are currently living – over the past five years, we have watched on the newsreel as New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region have been hit first with Hurricane Katrina, then the BP oil spill in 2010.Connecting so closely with a work of dystopian literature is a little bit creepy – but also thoroughly engrossing.

Because we have had the images of devastated New Orleans so recently before us, it is not difficult to imagine this section of the country as hell-on-Earth; I’m impressed, though, with the way that Bacigalupi develops the details of this harsh new America.The residents of New Orleans have always been known as colorful and superstitious, so it is not surprising that in the wake of such extreme environmental disasters, a new society would spring up that is similarly religious/superstitious.Nailer’s world is filled with people who are both cruel and religious, who are willing to turn to both violence and the Fates in order to survive.It is this picture of a desperate society reduced to brutality that makes Nailer such a sympathetic character – he is one of the few that still dreams, still values human life, still seeks to understand those around him.As Bacigalupi pulls you along on this fast-paced adventure, you will likely find yourself hoping for Nailer’s survival not only as an individual, but as a symbol compassionate humanity triumphing over the poverty, destruction and desperation of society.

Fun Facts About Lauren: I have a Master's Degree in Literature from American University in Washington DC, and I am currently working for a non-profit family services agency in the NYC Metro area. I collect books (over one thousand and counting) and I love Harry Potter, The Hunger Games and all things Joss Whedon. I also love to make jewelry, work on historical fashion illustrations, and paint with watercolors. But those interests usually lose out to my first loves: reading and writing. Comments on my posts make me feel special. Don't you want to make me feel special?